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Sunday night, a customer of Midway Craft House sauntered into the convenience store. Reaching over the shelf from the candy aisle, the customer tried to grab a box of Trojan condoms but accidentally knocked a box onto the keyboard player.

These things happen when a convenience store doubles as an impromptu concert venue.

"Of course it had to be condoms," said Alexa Blake of the Minneapolis psychedelic rock band Harakiri. The group shared a chuckle between songs after realizing they were performing right next to boxes of tampons, too.

Bands are booked to perform against a backdrop of wine, sodas, mouthwash and headache medicine at Midway Craft, a convenience store and growler pub in Denton.

Robert W. Hart/Special Contributor

Midway Craft is a neighborhood shop with walk-in coolers of beer, wine and some grocery store items. When bands started performing there in April 2016, music fans found it's a surprisingly loud, clear place to listen to live tunes. And as of this week, bands no longer have to bring their own PA system because Rahim Dewji, the store manager who also books shows, just bought one.

He remembers Denton as a hub for live music. But between when he was a UNT college student and now, many concert venues nearby had closed. "I always heard people saying they wished there was still music around here," Dewji says.

With similar memories from his days at UNT, store owner Shakeel Merchant liked the idea of having live music. "Frye Street was the place to be," Merchant says. "But over the years it dwindled -- and there were bands that needed a launch pad. "

Now hosting live music, comedy, poetry readings and podcast recordings a few nights a week, Midway Craft House has become a place for young artists to listen and perform.

At a punk rock show, a crowd moshed, dented a shelf and knocked over a few things. But the transition has been surprisingly smooth otherwise. Merchant even admits that he was in the crowd, headbanging at a metal show.

Midway Craft House doesn't look like a music venue. It looks like a convenience store and a growler bar. It's that, too.

Tomas Gonzalez/DRC

"It's a Denton thing," Merchant says. "This is a quiet community with gritty music."

César Velasco performed in front of a few dozen people at Midway on Sept. 2 with his Denton punk rock band, Thin Skin. He says the unlikely venue is filling a void for small shows after Rubber Gloves closed and J&J's Pizza on the Square stopped hosting shows in the basement.

Indeed, Condor & Jaybird, an upbeat psychedelic pop group on tour from Illinois, was having trouble finding a place to perform in Denton. "We sent an e-mail to every venue," says Jeramie Anderson. "They either didn't book Sundays or they were already booked."

Though some customers pause at the front door, likely surprised by the venue, they tend to hang out. Grateful for the exposure, Anderson says customers at Midway Craft seemed more attentive than crowds at other small venues or house shows.